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No Cleric Left Behind

This article is over 16 years old and may contain outdated information

As the No Child Left Behind initiative waits to be reauthorized by Congress, a debate is stirring about how students should be tested and taught. As some teachers struggle to engage students in a school environment that is increasingly emphasizing test scores over creativity, one after-school workshop in Oakland, California is making use of a surprising model for contextual learning: tabletop roleplaying.

The Roleplay Workshop” takes kids age 10 and up and puts them in a Dungeons & Dragons-esque fantasy world called Abantey, where they can fight monsters, search for hidden treasure and learn ancient magical secrets – while brushing up on basic math, science and social skills. “We don’t say that’s what they’re doing, but it’s what they’re doing,” says Director Becky Thomas.

Thomas, once a full-time teacher, started roleplaying with her students almost by accident 21 years ago at Archway Elementary School in Oakland. She was making maps for a game with her friends during study hall one day, when her students caught her and asked what she was doing. They were immediately interested and wanted to play. “We had so much fun, they asked me to do a summer program,” Thomas says. After three years of hosting summer camps and after-school programs, Thomas quit teaching to run the workshop full-time.

Today the after-school program is squeezed into a half-loft above Dr. Comics and Mr. Games in Oakland, where Thomas and her partner Steve Kani create fantasy adventures embedded with many opportunities to learn. From doing math exercises during combat to researching how much water a camel needs to drink while traveling in the desert, the students (34 are enrolled now, and about 100 last summer) are learning while they adventure. “Someone, somewhere must have done a study,” Thomas says, “but I know I learn better when I am having fun.”

Assistant Marco Ginsberg, one of 18 student staff members at the program, worked at the Roleplay Workshop for three years before stopping due to scheduling conflicts. He says he has helped the kids flesh out the basic math skills they need to create characters and do battle. “Watching a student who previously couldn’t understand the concept of averaging memorize it after a few stat checks is a special joy in itself,” Ginsberg says.

According to psychiatrist Dr. Adam Blatner, professor and author of Interactive and Improvisational Drama: Varieties of Applied Theater and Performance, there are two ways to learn: assimilation, or rote memorization, and accommodation, or learning by doing.

Assimilated facts are easy to forget, but you never forget how to ride a bike. That could be part of roleplaying’s value – it is learning by doing, in a sense. It allows kids to be as creative as they like, because they can solve problems in unexpected ways.

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Twelve-year-old Matt White decided at first that he wanted to play a female character named Freddy whose main goal was to find love. After a few minutes, though, he decided to switch back to playing a male. “I sort of forgot I was playing a girl in the naming process,” White says, with a sideways grin. His character’s race, the Plajets, value humor in all situations – a value he was not forgetting.

Thomas has seen that kind of role experimentation before. “I have seen the ‘bullies’ play characters that have strict codes of honor,” she says. “They are getting to make a choice from a perspective they don’t normally have.”

And they can also make mistakes. During one scene, a group of players were sent out to rescue a kidnapped girl. A monster attacked them in the night. After killing the animal, some kids decided to take the time to harvest its valuable scales. Although they were ultimately successful at rescuing the girl, the victory was dampened because she had suffered longer than necessary.

“It’s a lesson in choices,” Thomas says.

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And in the real world, understanding how to make good choices, along with other social skills, may be more important than fact memorization.

Assimilative learning is easier to test for, Blatner says.

But employers won’t necessarily be looking at test scores. According to image

JosĆ© Millan, Chancellor of the California Community Colleges, thinks learning by memorization has become so disconnected from real-life applications that it becomes irrelevant to students. “We need to reconnect with the generation who have grown up playing Xboxes,” he said in a panel discussion on education this fall. “We need to reach out to them and make [learning] fun … It doesn’t have to be a drudgery. We have to keep them motivated.”

Though surrounded by living examples of contextual learning’s success, Thomas said there is a time and place for more traditional, rote memorization. “I find myself really conflicted as an educator,” she says. “I’m afraid that in the push for contextual learning, we’ll lose sight of the fact that sometimes we just need to memorize facts.”

If a student at the workshop hasn’t memorized his times tables, for example, Thomas bluntly asks him to do so, because it makes more advanced math problems quicker and easier to solve. Not even a calculator can replace the value of that skill, she says.

Learning needs to be balanced between assimilation and accommodation, then. But when only one learning method is tested, and teachers are accountable for only one aspect of education, how much are students missing out on? Seventeen-year-old Adam Littlestone-Luriais is a Game Master In Training at the workshop. For two years, he fought with Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, a disease with symptoms of severe exhaustion. Even when he was sleeping 18 hours a day, he would drag himself to the Roleplay Workshop to participate.

“I’m incredibly grateful to have had Abantey available to me during these years,” he says. “It gave me a community and a chance to engage my mind in something other than the flu-like pain of my illness.”

Today Littlestone-Luriais is learning valuable leadership skills and even crisis management skills, which Thomas requires her staff to master. Once he graduates to Game Master, he will be in charge of a table of kids and will create a story for them. “It’s … been a wonderful experience and quite a challenge to learn to be an authority figure and to be able to maintain a fun environment for the players that nevertheless feels safe, controlled and supportive,” he says.

Ginsberg has also learned a lot while having fun in the fantasy world of Abantey. “I’ve somehow managed to improve my self-control, confidence and discipline on the side,” he says.

The leadership skills, social skills and creativity these students have learned can’t be measured by a standardized test. No studies have been published on the effectiveness of roleplaying in education. There’s no formal documentation correlating test scores and contextual learning. But these students will tell you they have performed better because of what they have learned.

Some students are not even aware they are learning as they play. For Thomas, that is one of Abantey’s greatest secrets: that learning is fun.

Lacey Coleman is a freelance contributor to The Escapist.


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